Advance Involves Loss
By: Venidikt • Essay • 439 Words • January 3, 2010 • 779 Views
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It has been said that “Any Advance involves some loss”. This is in fact true because life is a learning process, where if nothing is lost nothing is learned. Mistakes are made and people learn from them. In life things are lost but something will always come from it. There have been many events in history and in literature that prove this saying right. In order for they’re to be an advance, or for something to be gained there are costs of sacrifices to be made but in the end the result is usually beneficial.
In between 1861 and 1865 there was a Civil War in the United Sates of America between the North and South in which the South wanted to secede from the Union. The civil war ended with a human cost of over half a million lives and untold amounts of property. It was a brutal conflict. Reuniting the nation proved to be a long and difficult task. The North’s victory meant that Lincolns goal of keeping the nation whole was achieved. He looked to restore peace and harmony. “The Emancipation Proclamation” of 1803 had announced the North would abolish slavery in the rebelling states. Lincoln planned to have the rebel states pass laws abolishing slavery, but since the states took no action congress moved. In December 1865, the states ratified the thirteenth amendment abolishing slavery.
In the play “A Raisin in the Sun”, Lorraine Hansberry, the younger family was not a very wealthy one. Their financial troubles caused for tension and discontent.